My new bestest best mate Adam has convinced me that it is high time that I sat down and listened to .... The Beatles yeaaaaaahhhh, clap clap applause.
It is rather strange isn't it how one can go through life and never have actually sat down with each of the Beatles albums in turn and yet here I am at the age of 47 and a half and I've never done that. Of course I've heard many of the Beatles tracks and I've got the blue and red compilations, but we all know that an album is different. It's hopefully put together and crafted as a whole and is a snapshot of its time.
So with some guitars and my banjo by my side I have this morning been listening and playing to Please Please Me and With The Beatles.
I have to say that I Saw Her Standing There is an excellent introduction to an album. I do have a few technical questions. Firstly who is playing what? I of course recognise the drums, but is it McCartney's bass playing that de dum dum dum dum de dum dum dum dum, with Lennon playing the chords on top. What amplification did they use, any effects? And what (if I have this correct) is Mr Harrison doing? (I am really ignorant, I know it's unforgiveable, but...). Who plays the harmonica? This is hardly ever mentioned (in my hearing) yet is an essential part of their sound.
When I listen to it (and try to play it) I'm thinking about the context in which it was released. What else was being played at the time, did it just blow everyone away with its originality or was it just an excellent example of the current genre. I think it is coming from Rock n' Roll, another genre I am woefully ignorant of. I hear Country in it as well, but not the blues? Am I really being a twit!
The tracks I really picked up on on the first album are Love me Do, Twist and Shout and I Saw Her Standing There, but I'm wondering if this is because I'm so used to them and not to the others. I have spent an hour or so trying to learn the riff to Twist and Shout, it's really hard to get a clean tone and picking. Quite a lot of the tracks seem formulaic and trite. I suppose that just reflects the style of the times - Chains for instance. It's the moments when they hit a rock riff that seems to lift them - e.g. in the ComeOn, Come On bit in Please Please Me, it's the edge they get, then it goes all wishy washy. Fun though.
Love Me Do is just brilliant. Simple chords, but what they do with them...brilliance. And that little vibrato in the harmony on Pleaeaease. I get the Dayna Effect shiver with it. And that descending chord progression on Do You Want To Know A Secret is really catching, though I'm not sure about it as a song, lot's of ideas, but some confusion?
I pick up echoes of Crowded House in There's A Place, (of course it's the other way round, but you know what I mean) This song is growing on me.
The second album I didn't find as strong, although there are some obviously good tracks, but seems more "pop" like. There are some really good ideas - Don't Bother Me is cool, but then loses it half way through. Were there a lot of pressures on them to be commercial? Or was it the usual second album pressure to come up with the goods.
I was stunned (not in a nice way!) by McCartney's Till There Was You - Wings in embryo.
I love the intro to Money...though I do have a predilection to the Flying Lizzards? version.
I'd be interested in what others might say about this. I know I could go and research on the internet, but I thought it might be interesting. As Adam said to me, how fortunate to be able to listen to the albums for the first time - he's right.
